My oped attacks the false narrative on progressive prosecutors.
In CA, Kern County had the highest per capita homicide rate —double SF, despite being the same population size. The Republican DA has blasted reforms like reducing sentencing enhancements.”
Schubert’s anti-reform approach does not promote safety; Sacramento has seen a dramatic increase in crime. Just last month, a mass shooting in Sacramento took 6 lives. Nonetheless, Schubert has falsely blamed progressive prosecutors throughout California for upticks in crime.
Nationally, one of the largest homicide increases occurred in Fort Worth, Texas — where its tough-on-crime prosecutor attacked judges for setting bail she deemed too low.
Memphis, Tennessee, has one of the highest murder rates in the country, despite its DA’s punitive approach that includes prosecuting kids as adults. Indeed, murder rates have been 40% higher in Republican-run states.
This is true beyond homicides; California jurisdictions with some of the harshest prosecutors — like Riverside — have the highest crime rates. And violent crime in California is worse in conservative jurisdictions.
But only progressive prosecutors are made to answer for crime rates; I have yet to learn of a traditional prosecutor attacked for crime increases (take Oakland, where homicide rates have ballooned — crime reports there rarely name, let alone blame, the longstanding DA).
The truth is that progressive reforms have not negatively impacted crime rates; an examination of 35 jurisdictions found that reforms did not increase crime.
To achieve long-term safety, progressive prosecutors recognize that government must invest in housing, education and treatment to prevent the poverty, desperation and illness that often lead to crime.
Rather than blaming progressive prosecutors for national trends — or giving oxygen to the false narrative that they’ve caused increased crime — we must have the honest, tough conversations about what it will take to reduce crime.
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Today marks one year since the recall of DA Chesa Boudin—a night I will never forget.
I wish I could say the false attacks on reform DAs have stopped since then, but the recall was only one of a series of coordinated attacks on prosecutors & criminal justice reform.
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In Georgia, the anti-democratic SB 92 was signed into law this year, creating a commission overseeing prosecutors with the power to remove them for how they exercise their discretion.
Spoiler alert: they’re only targeting reform-minded DAs.
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There are a plethora of other bad faith bills in many states aimed at targeting prosecutorial discretion and trying to oust prosecutors for exercising their discretion to promote justice.
How can we trust a district attorney who straight up lied to the public and concealed this kind of information?
“The nonprofit that paid Jenkins, Neighbors for a Better San Francisco, is not allowed to participate in campaigns for or against political candidates because of its status as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit.”
How can we trust a DA who violates the law to advance her own interests?
Yesterday, an interim, unelected DA fired 15 public servants committed to justice.
People who fight corruption; hold police accountable; protect the innocent; correct injustices; and promote transparency.
These firings are revealing. 🧵
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What do the firings say about the new administration?
They say that it does not value transparency or public access to information. It does not care about righting wrongful convictions & sentences. It does not care about corruption. It does not care about police accountability.
This makes us all less safe.
It shatters trust in our system. It prevents us from knowing what is really happening in the office & how decisions are being made.
It tells communities hurt by police violence that their pain is not as important as protecting the powerful.
The media love to falsely blame progressives for every crime.
You know what they don’t love? To tell the stories of the harms caused by incarceration or the failures of our prison system to rehabilitate. To blame conservative approaches when someone sent to prison recidivates.
The media also don’t love to tell stories of the many people helped my reforms.
The stories of the kids who got to grow up with their parents at home. The people who thrived once given a chance. The people who healed once their underlying struggles were addressed.
Being a progressive, reform prosecutor is more than words.
It is about actions.
Criminal justice reform is the baseline for lasting public safety.
This thread lists some (not even close to all) of the reforms & achievements of DA @chesaboudin in just 2 years.
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Promoting justice:
-Prevented the criminalization of poverty by stopping the DA's office's use of cash bail
-Developed victim-centered responses to crime
-Committed to prosecuting kids as kids
-Ended SF's death penalty
-Helped safely reduce SF’s jail population
Preventing/Responding to Gun Violence:
-Filed groundbreaking civil prosecution against ghost gun makers--& an injunction to stop the flow of these unregulated, dangerous guns--with @GiffordsCourage & @KekerLLP
-@AGRobBonta's Office now have partnered w/ our office on this suit